РефератыИностранный языкA A Farewell To Arms 2

A Farewell To Arms 2

A Farewell To Arms – A Love Story Essay, Research Paper


A Farewell to Arms, by Ernest Hemingway, is a typical love story. A


Romeo and his Juliet placed against the odds. In this novel, Romeo is


Frederick Henry and Juliet is Catherine Barkley. Their love affair


must survive the obstacles of World War I. The background of war-torn


Italy adds to the tragedy of the love story. The war affects the


emotions and values of each character. The love between Catherine and


Frederick must outlast long separations, life-threatening war-time


situations, and the uncertainty of each other’s whereabouts or


condition. This novel is a beautiful love story of two people who need


each other in a period of upheaval.


Frederick Henry is an American who serves as a lieutenant in the


Italian army to a group of ambulance drivers. Hemingway portrays


Frederick as a lost man searching for order and value in his life.


Frederick disagrees with the war he is fighting. It is too chaotic and


immoral for him to rationalize its cause. He fights anyway, because


the army puts some form of discipline in his life. At the start of the


novel, Frederick drinks and travels from one house of prostitution to


another and yet he is discontent because his life is very unsettled.


He befriends a priest because he admires the fact that the priest


lives his life by a set of values that give him an orderly lifestyle.


Further into the novel, Frederick becomes involved with Catherine


Barkley. He slowly falls in love with her and, in his love for


her, he finds commitment. Their relationship brings some order and


value to his life. Compared to this new form of order in his life,


Frederick sees the losing Italian army as total chaos and disorder


where he had previously seen discipline and control. He can no longer


remain a part of something that is so disorderly and so, he deserts


the Italian army. Frederick’s desertion from the Italian army is the


turning point of the novel. This is the significance of the title, A


Farewell to Arms. When Frederick puts aside his involvement in the


war, he realizes that Catherine is the order and value in his life and


that he does not need anything else to give meaning to his life.


At the conclusion of this novel, Frederick realizes that he cannot


base his life on another person or thing because, ultimately, they


will leave or disappoint him. He realizes that the order and values


necessary to face the world must come from within himself.


Catherine Barkley is an English volunteer nurse who serves in Italy.


She is considered very experienced when it comes to love and loss


since she has already been confronted with the death of a loved one


when her fiance was killed earlier in the war. The reader is not as


well acquainted with Catherine’s inner thoughts and feelings as we are


with those of Frederick. The story is told through Frederick’s eyes


and the reader only meets Catherine through the dialogue between her


and Frederick or through his personal interpretations of her actions.


Catherine already possesses the knowledge that her own life cannot be


dependent on another. She learned t

his lesson through the death of her


fiance. Her love for Frederick is what her life revolves around, yet


she knows not to rely on him to be the order in her life. Had she been


dependent on Frederick for the order in her life, she would not have


been able to allow him to participate in the war for fear of losing


her own stability with his death.


The theme that Hemingway emphasizes throughout the novel is the search


for order in a chaotic world. Hemingway conveys this through


Frederick’s own personal search during the chaos of World War I.


Catherine has found strength within herself to lead her through life.


This is what Frederick must come to realize. Through his involvement


with Catherine, Frederick slowly finds his own inner strength.


Frederick’s affair with Catherine prompts him to leave his wild life


of prostitutes and drink. He becomes aware of an element of stability


in their affair and realizes that the war that he was involved in was


too chaotic, so he deserts the army. He and Catherine make a life for


themselves totally isolated from everything and everyone else.


Frederick believes that his life is now completely in order and that


his values are in perspective, yet he still seems discontented. He


continuously has to convince himself that he has “a fine life.” He has


not yet reached Catherine’s level that enables her to be perfectly


happy in their love and yet not dependent on it for all comfort and


support. Frederick still has to find that within himself.


Until the conclusion of the novel, Frederick still relies on Catherine


as the source of order in his life. With the end of their affair


when Catherine dies giving birth to their stillborn love-child,


Frederick realizes that he cannot depend on any one person, such


as Catherine, or any thing, such as religion, war, or frivolity, for


order and discipline. Hemingway describes Frederick’s enlightenment


best in the final paragraph of the novel when Frederick sees


Catherine’s corpse for the first and last time. Frederick’s reaction


was that “it was like saying good-by to a statue.” Frederick realizes


that Catherine was only a symbol of the order and strength in his


life. Strength to face life must come from within him and only he will


be able to get himself through his own life. He will have to learn to


depend on himself. Frederick realizes this and is able to get on with


his life on his own. “After a while [he] went out and left the


hospital and walked back to the hotel in the rain.” He did not mourn


or feel like his own life had ended with her death, rather he was able


to continue on with his newfound inner strength and face his world


alone.


This novel succeeds in getting Hemingway’s message across. Frederick’s


realization causes the reader to reflect on his/her own life and on


what institutions they depend on in their own lives. I enjoyed this


novel because I learned along with Frederick that I must face my life


on my own. The strength to face my problems cannot come from any other


source because no other source can ever be as permanent as the


strength that I can find within myself.

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